...the opposite of Udine's Ward 9
Some of the forbidden contraband |
ENABLING ENVIRONMENTS: (related Comparison to the criteria for each standard,
as detailed on EE website: http://tinyurl.com/EEsatRCPsych )
BELONGING Not seen | not
happening | not likely | no
BOUNDARIES Opaque | possibly
inconsistent | no visible review system
COMMUNICATION Unlikely | no opportunity | not
so
DEVELOPMENT Absolutely not | forbidden
| no | absolutely not
INVOLVEMENT Does not happen | stated
as policy but no evidence of it happening | no
SAFETY not so | unlikely
| possibly | not happening
STRUCTURE slightly | no
evidence of review | often prevented
EMPOWERMENT absolutely not | not so | no
way | no, nor do family members
LEADERSHIP possibly, but likely
to be administrative only | very unlikely | unsure | not so | possibly, not
seen
OPENNESS not really | absolutely
not | not likely
3 RRELATIONAL PRACTICE MANIFESTO: (commentary on a few selected quotes
from the manifesto)
·
An enabling and facilitating attitude
This
was not in evidence at all; if anything, the staff attitude was professionally
distanced and dispassionate.·
·
An understanding of the inner and outer lives of
individuals in their social field.
Very
practical and superficial understanding of residents’ ‘outer lives’.
No acknowledgement at all of need to understand ‘inner life’ beyond overt
psychopathological symptoms.
It is unlikely that the staff would know about, or be trained to include, this
consideration.·
·
If staff hold all the power, this keeps users dependent
on services and does not give them the opportunity to take control of their
lives or have a say in their care.
In
the house seen, the power is clearly held elsewhere – from the evidence of our
eyes, by the company policy and the visiting consultant psychiatrist. There is
a strong sense that on-site staff have no discretion whatsoever in implementing
decisions, and residents have to accept what they are told without any
opportunity to discuss or challenge it effectively.·
·
When human connections are lost, we see the breakdown of
communities and relationships, and people struggle to find hope for the future.
It
felt that people here were disconnected, there was very little sense of
community – or hope for anything to be able to change.
·
Make time to reflect on your current practices together
Reflective supervision would require all members of the multidisciplinary team
to come together to discuss their feelings about the work; it is extremely
unlikely that anything like it happens here.
Repurposed graphics from DH's PD programme, 2005 |
HOMESTEAD CLINICAL MODEL (directly comparing models, based on the stated ideals draft for Homestead)
Nothing was seen to indicate that relationships were actively used as part of the treatment. Compare to www.cht.org.uk
Residents who feel cut off and isolated remain cut off and isolated, as they ‘are unwilling to engage’. There is no contact with the local community (which has rich resources, including nature). A small garden area is probably pleasant and well-used in Summer.
It is unclear whether any residents feel heard (communication is almost entirely in the opposite direction), but there was no indication of this being any different with diversity issues.
There is no informed choice of medication; its prescription and administration is not able to be questioned without causing disagreement. Withdrawal does not appear to be on the agenda.
No exploratory conversations are held to find explanation, understanding or meaning in psychotic’ symptoms. Living is the bare minimum – hygiene, order and cleanliness are well-attended to, but few would consider this to be ‘living well’ – or have anything to do with one’s future.
Although we saw no verbally aggressive or unduly forceful action, it is clear that dissent from what is suggested is only possible through distant and bureaucratic processes. The pervasive ethos is of gentle but pervasive social control, with its consequent lack of freedom.
This does not seem to happen at all.
Here, the MHA is the main tool to allow insistence of conformity and prevention of any non-compliance. Relationships with statutory services were seen to exist, and discharge to them was possible – and appeared to be common practice when behaviour could not be contained (eg to forensic units)